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Her unabashed support of Oscar López Rivera, who helped form the violent Puerto Rican independence group, enraged law-enforcement members, who will never forget the organization’s reign of terror.

“It’s really sickening,” said former NYPD Detective Anthony “Tony” Senft, 70, who lost an eye while trying to defuse a bomb planted by FALN — or Armed Forces of National Liberation — at the Brooklyn federal courthouse in 1982.

“They’re making him a folk hero, and he’s a terrorist. They’re making this guy like Robin Hood.”

FALN has claimed responsibility for more than 100 bombings in the Big Apple and other US cities in the 1970s and early 1980s.
The militant group’s attacks killed six people and wounded at least 130 others.

But that didn’t stop a gleeful Mark-Viverito from showing at López Rivera’s release in San Juan, wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the Puerto Rican flag and the word “libertà,” meaning “free.”

She even joined López Rivera, 74, when he stopped at a federal building to return the electronic tags that monitored him.

The FALN leader, whom supporters insist was a political prisoner, was never tied to any of the bombings, which include the still-unsolved 1975 explosion that killed four people and injured more than 60 at landmarked Fraunces Tavern in the Financial District.

“On behalf of the cops he injured and civilians he killed, I condemn the speaker for her words and actions,” he said. “Any politician who embraces evil and terror has no business holding office in this country.”

City Council deputy press secretary Shirley Limongi said López Rivera’s release was a “pivotal moment for Puerto Rico.”